• Why do I read the NY Daily News?

    Yes, sometimes their owner/publisher, and columnists like Zev Chafets (blaming Jerrold Nadler for not caring about the safety of American Jews) make me want th throw the paper across the room. But then they do something like this:

    Gay rights overdue

    State Republicans are signaling that a gay rights bill stalled in Albany for three decades may finally come to a vote. Why now? It’s obvious. Election Day is a month away, and Gov. Pataki’s efforts to get the legislation passed this year have come to naught. Gay and lesbian voters comprise a sizable, focused chunk of the voting public.

    And so the GOP is scrambling: Pataki’s angling for a preelection Senate vote on the bill. State Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno hints that a vote could actually happen – after the November election. Mayor Bloomberg insists the measure will be passed before the end of the year, thanks (of course) to Pataki’s support.

    Pataki’s name was booed by many when Bloomberg mentioned it recently at a major gay event, and the frustration is understandable. After 30 years, you’d think that adding two little words – sexual orientation – to the list of personal qualities protected from discrimination under state law would be a no-brainer. Twelve states and 20 New York localities, including the city, have managed to do it. The holdup in Albany? While Pataki has supported the bill for several years, though initially he opposed it, Bruno, who is allied with some of the state Senate’s most conservative Republicans, hasn’t yet struck a deal.

    The bill, like so many pieces of legislation that languish in Albany limbo, should have been approved long ago. It should be passed as soon as a new session can be convened. But meanwhile, let’s hear – pardon us – straight talk from state leaders, starting with Bruno: Will the gay rights bill, a matter of simple decency, be passed or won’t it? If they can’t deliver, surely they understand: Voters, gay or straight, can swing both ways.

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  • Our own theocracy

    Maybe they should spend some time reading about world history, other cultures, and an intelligence report or two.

    White House staffers gather for Bible study

    (via TBOGG)

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  • The NY Times Magazine

    … has two great articles today.

    What is a European, by A.S. Byatt, and Michael Kimmelman on the re-appearance of Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty.

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  • Article on Tom Ryan

    Bay Windows has a great article on the only out gay man in the NY Fire Department — Tom Ryan.

    Earlier, in an interview, Ryan, who turns 43 in early November, said that in the last year he found out that 25 closeted firefighters died in the World Trade Center. When Bay Windows spoke to him a week after the terrorist attack, he reported that to his knowledge none had-at least ones that were open about their sexuality. “There also were gay firefighters in the buildings who survived and still are afraid to come out,” he said. “I find that incredible. How could you fear anything after going through that?”

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  • Gallery recommendations!

    We braved the rain to go to a few shows today, and I strongly recommend two of them:

    The Johnson show had me thinking about whether I could sell something to buy one. Also, go see the movie about him at the Film Forum.

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  • Firefighters’ March

    I just got back from standing in the rain, watching the firefighters march up Eighth Avenue from 14th Street to Madison Square Garden for the memorial service there. When I awoke this morning, the first thing I heard through my apartment windows was the sound of bagpipes.

    There were only a few people standing on the sidewalks watching. The barricades that had been up since 5 last night seemed overkill.

    They all seemed fascinated by the NYSC on the corner of 23rd and Eighth. Maybe there was a class with pretty women happening — all of the ones I saw do that were men. The departments from Florida and Texas were notable for the amount of Latinos/Latinas in their groups — a lot more than we have.

    I saw men in kilts, bagpipe players having finished their march, carrying five cameras at once to take pictures for their friends that were still marching.

    Most of them were Americans, but there were a lot of Canadians, and we saw one small group of Italians and one that was French. I’m sure there were more countries, but I didn’t see the whole procession. A policeman standing near us was telling a neighbor from my building about going to Ground Zero to try to help — “they were turning people away, there were so many.”

    I could hear the ceremony starting a little after ten on the loudspeakers that were set up along the avenue. I think Giuliani’s living with a gay friend in his apartment for a while has been good for him. The first thing he said was that he wished that Father Mychal Judge were there to speak first. He also said that the people who died were trying to rescue people regardless of race, religion, or sexual orientation.

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  • Police barricades everywhere

    There are police barricades everywhere along Eighth Avenue and Ninth Avenue in Chelsea. Those were the only avenues I saw tonight. I don’t know if they’re on Seventh too.

    The waiter at dinner — a new idiosyncratic Italian place called Morelli’s at 21st Street and Ninth Avenue — said it was because of a firemen’s march.

    What, are they planning a riot in my neighborhood tomorrow?

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  • More than one per week

    They won because they’re the best technology, right?

    Microsoft discloses security flaw

    Microsoft Corp. disclosed a security flaw Thursday of “critical” severity in its Outlook Express e-mail programs.

    The security bulletin is the company’s 58th this year.

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  • Clowns

    This one’s for Glenn: an exhibit of amateur paintings of clowns from the collection of Robert Berman and Diane Keaton.

    Speaking of Ms. Keaton, I recently watched Manhattan for the first time since I moved to NYC in 1989. It’s such a wonderful appreciation of New York. Now that I’ve lived here for years, I recognize so much, and I know where they are when they’re in that gallery building on West Broadway where Castelli, Sonnabend, etc. were located. I would not have laughed as much at the “oh, you liked that?” conversation when Diane Keaton first appears. I don’t think I knew who Diane Arbus even was when I first saw it. I still remember laughing at the angst over pronouncing “Van Gogh” when I first saw it in college.

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  • Guide to Tracey Emin

    Let’s talk about art for a bit, rather than politics. The Guardian has an amusing Web Guide to Tracey Emin, a/k/a ‘Mad Tracey from Margate’.

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